Reasoning http compcogscisydney orgpsyc 2071 Danielle Navarro Deductive
- Slides: 104
Reasoning http: //compcogscisydney. org/psyc 2071/ Danielle Navarro
• Deductive reasoning • Informal reasoning
“WE talk of man* being the rational animal; and the traditional intellectualist philosophy has always made a great point of treating the brutes as wholly irrational creatures. Nevertheless, it is by no means easy to decide just what is meant by reason” - William James (1890)
Reasoning, logic and truth Aristotle … and the peripatetics Philo Zeno … and the dialecticians stoics http: //plato. stanford. edu/entries/logic-ancient/ • How is the truth of a claim established? • What should we believe? • Are there rules we should follow? • What are these rules? • (And do we follow them? )
Kinds of reasoning Deductive reasoning Using facts to reach a “logically certain” conclusion
Kinds of reasoning Deductive reasoning Inductive reasoning Using facts to reach a “logically certain” conclusion Using facts to reach a “plausible” conclusion (allows room for doubt)
Part 1: Deductive reasoning
“Syllogisms” are a tool formalising arguments All men* are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal (* With very sincere apologies to everyone for the sexist framing here – this specific phrasing has a long
The major premise states a general rule All men* are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal
The major premise states a general rule The minor premise states a specific fact All men* are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal
The major premise states a general rule The minor premise states a specific fact All men* are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal The conclusion is the statement we are asked to accept
A slight variation on this argument If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal
Major premise: Antecedent: “Socrates is a man” Consequent: ”Socrates is mortal” If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal
Major premise: Antecedent: “Socrates is a man” Consequent: ”Socrates is mortal” If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal No changes to the minor premise or the conclusion
If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man “Affirming” evidence refers to a fact (in the minor premise) that agrees with the major premise in some sense
If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is NOT a man “Denying” evidence refers to a fact (in the minor premise) that disagrees with the major premise in some sense
• Valid arguments: • Conclusion is necessarily true if the premises are true • i. e. , it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion to be false (at the same time)
Valid argument by affirmation… (positive evidence) Affirms Denies Antecedent “Modus ponens” Denying the antecedent Consequent Affirming the consequent “Modus tollens”
Modus ponens (“the way that affirms”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal Minor premise asserts that the antecedent of the major premise is TRUE
Modus ponens (“the way that affirms”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal Mortals Men This Venn diagram describes the structure of the major premise (*sort of)
Modus ponens (“the way that affirms”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal Mortals Men X It’s impossible to put the x inside the “man circle” and outside the “mortal circle” Socrates
Modus ponens (“the way that affirms”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal Mortals Men X Socrates
Valid argument by denial… (negative evidence) Affirms Denies Antecedent “Modus ponens” Denying the antecedent Consequent Affirming the consequent “Modus tollens”
Modus tollens (“the way that denies”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a NOT a mortal Therefore, Socrates is NOT a man Minor premise asserts that the consequent of the major premise is FALSE
Modus tollens (“the way that denies”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a NOT a mortal Therefore, Socrates is NOT a man Mortals Men If Socrates is outside the mortal circle, then “he” can’t be inside the man circle X Socrates
Modus tollens (“the way that denies”) If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a NOT a mortal Therefore, Socrates is NOT a man Mortals Men X Socrates
• Valid arguments: • Conclusion is necessarily true if the premises are true • i. e. , it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion to be false (at the same time) • Invalid arguments: • Conclusion might be true, but it is not guaranteed by the premises • i. e. , it is possible for the premises to be true but the conclusion can still be false
Invalid argument by affirmation… Affirms Denies Antecedent “Modus ponens” Denying the antecedent Consequent Affirming the consequent “Modus tollens”
Affirming the consequent If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is mortal Therefore, Socrates is a man? Minor premise asserts that the consequent of the major premise is TRUE
Affirming the consequent If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is mortal Therefore, Socrates is a man? Socrates Mortals X This is invalid because there are other things that are mortal without being men Men
Invalid argument by denial… Affirms Denies Antecedent “Modus ponens” Denying the antecedent Consequent Affirming the consequent “Modus tollens”
Denial of the antecedent If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a NOT a man Therefore, Socrates is NOT a mortal? Minor premise asserts that the antecedent of the major premise is FALSE
Denial of the antecedent If Socrates is a man, then he is mortal Socrates is a NOT a man Therefore, Socrates is NOT a mortal? Mortals Men As before. . . we have a mortal that is not a man X
Minor premise AFFIRMS… Modus Ponens (MP) … the ANTECEDENT … the CONSEQUENT Minor premise DENIES… Denying the Antecedent (DA) If P, then Q P If P, then Q not P Therefore, Q Therefore, not Q Affirming the Consequent (AC) Modus Tollens (MT) If P, then Q Q If P, then Q not Q Therefore, P Therefore, not P
Do people follow these deductive rules?
Barrouillet et al (2000) Adults are good with arguments about the ANTECEDENT Endorsement 100% 0% Grade 3 Adults
Barrouillet et al (2000) 100% Endorsement We’re not so sure what to do when the argument pertains to the CONSEQUENT 0% Grade 3 Adults
Barrouillet et al (2000) 100% Kids assume that AFFIRMATORY arguments are correct? 0% Grade 3 Adults
Wason’s (1968) selection task Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other ?
Wason’s (1968) selection task Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other R Does this need to be turned?
Wason’s (1968) selection task Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other R G Does this need to be turned?
Wason’s (1968) selection task Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other R G 2 Does this need to be turned?
Wason’s (1968) selection task Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other R G 2 7 Does this need to be turned?
Rule: If there is an R on one side of the card, then there is a 2 on the other R G 2 7 ANTECEDENT CONSEQUENT
If people solved the problem using deductive reasoning… Modus ponens “If R then 2” Modus tollens R G 2 7 ANTECEDENT AFFIRM CONSEQUENT DENY
“If R then 2” Modus ponens Affirming the consequent NOPE… people use a positive test strategy*, selecting the two cards that “affirm” the rule R G 2 7 ANTECEDENT AFFIRM CONSEQUENT AFFIRM * More traditionally called “confirmation bias” but this terminology is misleading
Aside: note the similarity between adults and kids… 100% AFFIRM “If R then 2” R G 2 7 AFFIRM 0% Grade 3 … humans like positive (there’s a good reason for this, btw) evidence Adu
People are better at deontic versions of the selection task Indicative rule – if this then that – “On Monday I wear black” (Sperber & Girotto 2002)
People are better at deontic versions of the selection task Indicative rule – if this thenx that – “On Monday I wear black” Deontic rule – if this then you should that – “On Monday you MUST wear black” (Sperber & Girotto 2002)
Whose ID needs to be checked? Minor drinking SOMETHING
Whose ID needs to be checked? Minor drinking SOMETHING x Adult drinking SOMETHING
Whose ID needs to be checked? Minor drinking SOMETHING Adult drinking SOMETHING x SOMEONE drinking tea
Whose ID needs to be checked? Minor drinking SOMETHING Adult drinking SOMETHING x SOMEONE drinking tea SOMEONE drinking beer
Whose ID needs to be checked? Minor drinking SOMETHING Modus ponens (Sperber & Girotto 2002) Adult drinking SOMETHING SOMEONE drinking tea SOMEONE drinking beer Modus tollens
Mini-summary • Logical reasoning • • Definitions of deductive and inductive reasioning Syllogisms and how they work Definitions of valid and invalid reasoning Four argument types: MP, MT, DA and DC • Empirical evidence • Developmental changes? • Wason selection task • Indicative vs deontic versions
Part 2: Inductive reasoning
All humans are mortal? Socrates was mortal Aristotle was mortal Cicero was mortal Augustus was mortal Inductive arguments rely on limited evidence to make a (general or specific) conclusion seem more plausible
All humans are mortal? Socrates was mortal Aristotle was mortal Cicero was mortal Augustus was mortal All humans are white. And male? And statues? Socrates was white Aristotle was white Cicero was white Augustus was white It. . . um… doesn’t always work
(FYI, we’ve seen inductive reasoning in the last lecture…) “Generalising from one stimulus to another is an act of induction”
Inductive arguments Dolphins express the TH 4 gene Seals express the TH 4 gene Dolphins → Seals Argument strength = do the premises make the conclusion feel more believable?
Which feels stronger? Dolphins → Seals Dolphins → Mice
Dolphins → Seals Dolphins → Mice (Data from Tauber, Navarro, Perfors & Steyvers, in press)
Premise-conclusion similarity (Osherson et al 1990) Dolphins → Seals x Dolphins → Mice People are more willing to endorse an inductive argument when the premise and conclusion items are similar
Which feels stronger? Dolphins + Seals → Cows Dolphins + Mice → Cows
Premise diversity (Osherson et al 1990) Dolphins + Seals → Cows People are more willing to endorse an inductive argument when the premises are dissimilar Dolphins + Mice → Cows Dolphins → Mice People are more willing to endorse an inductive argument when the premise and conclusion items are similar
Which feels stronger? Dolphins → Cows Dolphins + Mice→ Cows
Premise monotonicity (Osherson et al 1990) Dolphins → Cows People are more willing to make inductive generalisations when they have more examples! Dolphins + Mice→ Cows Dolphins → Mice People are more willing to endorse an inductive argument when the premise and conclusion items are similar
Mini-summary • Difference between induction and deduction • Phenomena in inductive reasoning • Premise-conclusion similarity • Premise diversity • Premise monotonicity
Part 3: Fallacies & informal reasoning
x x x Some “reasoning fallacies” occur because people fail to follow deductive logic… as we saw earlier in the lecture x
x x x Other reasoning fallacies occur because there’s something notquite-right with their content x x x x x
x x x We’ll focus on some of the empirical evidence about how these two work x x x x x
Arguments from ignorance “Claiming that X must be true just because you can’t prove that X is false”
“Ghosts exist… because there is no proof that they do not” (Hahn & Oaksford 2007)
This is also an argument from ignorance “Ghosts exist… because there is no proof that they do not” “There’s no Hatfield stop in Sydney … because it’s not on the Metro map” x (Hahn & Oaksford 2007)
Structure of the ghosts argument If ghosts don’t exist, there should be proof of their impossibility There is no proof of the impossibility of ghosts Therefore, ghosts exist
Structure of the trains argument If Hatfield exists, it should be listed on the Metro map It is not listed on the Metro map Therefore, Hatfield does not exist
These are both deductively valid If A then B Not B Modus tollens Therefore, not A A = ghosts exist B = proof that ghosts are impossible A = the Hatfield stop exists B = Hatfield is listed on the Metro map
Epistemic closure (“closed world”) The Sydney metro map is epistemically closed: it is presumed to be a complete representation of the train network No Hatfield on the map is very strong evidence that there is no Hatfield in world
Epistemic closure (“closed world”) The scientific literature on ghosts is NOT epistemically closed: there are true facts not in scientific journals! The fact that noone has proved ghosts impossible is not very strong evidence for the existence of ghosts
Another example Jon Snow can’t remember a day when it was 50 degrees in Sydney… therefore the temperature in Sydney has never reached 50 in living memory “Um… you’re a fictional character and basically an idiot”
Another example Jon Snow can’t remember a day when it was 50 degrees in Sydney… therefore the temperature in Sydney has never reached 50 in living memory x “Um… you’re a fictional character and basically an idiot” The Bureau of Meteorology has never recorded a temperature of 50 degrees in Sydney … therefore the temperature in Sydney has never reached 50 in living memory “We have extensive & detailed records of Sydney weather for over a
All the possible true facts about Sydney weather Bo. M knows most true facts and is rarely wrong You know nothing Jon Snow
X If Bo. M doesn’t know of a 50 degree day, there probably wasn’t one X There’s no reason to care what Jon Snow thinks
Do people respect the inductive strength of an argument from ignorance? I [strongly / weakly] believe that this drug [does / does not] have side effects because [one / fifty] experiments reported it (Oaksford & Hahn 2004)
I [strongly / weakly] believe that this drug [does / does not] have side effects because [one / fifty] experiments reported it (Oaksford & Hahn 2004)
I [strongly / weakly] believe that this drug [does / does not] have side effects because [one / fifty] experiments reported it (Oaksford & Hahn 2004)
I [strongly / weakly] believe that this drug [does / does not] have side effects because [one / fifty] experiments reported it (Oaksford & Hahn 2004)
Circular arguments “Assuming that X is true in order to prove that X is true”
Circular arguments God exists because the Bible says so, and the Bible is the word of God
Circular arguments God exists because the Bible says so, and the Bible is the word of God x Inductive reasoning is justified because it has worked in the past, so it will work in the future
Circular arguments God exists because the Bible says so, and the Bible is the word of God x Inductive reasoning is justified because it has worked in the past, so it will work in the future Electrons exist because we can see 3 -cm tracks in a cloud chamber, and 3 -cm tracks in a cloud chamber are the signatures of electrons
Hm. There is a white triangle because it is blocking the black circles and the black triangle… and we assume there’s a black triangle and black circles because there’s a white triangle blocking them
Constraint satisfaction, simplicity … and circularity? Layer 2 Layer 1 � � The simplicity and figural goodness properties of layer 1 provide evidence for the existence of layer 2, and vice versa … mutually reinforcing
Constraint satisfaction, simplicity … and circularity? Layer 2 Layer 1 � � One layer with 6 strange shapes? x The simplicity and figural goodness properties of layer 1 provide evidence for the existence of layer 2, and vice versa … mutually reinforcing I suppose this is possible but if that’s the best alternative hypothesis I’m going to go with the circular one!
Circular arguments are often an implicit appeal to an explanatory “system” Christianity ⇒ God + Bible Physics ⇒ Experiments + Theory � � The subjective “strength” of circular arguments depends on how strongly you accept the “system” as an explanation for a larger body of facts
Hahn & Oaksford (2007) John: Anne: I think there’s a thunderstorm What makes you think that? I just heard a loud noise that could have been thunder That could have been an airplane I think it was thunder, because I think it’s a thunderstorm Well, it has been really muggy around here today
Hahn & Oaksford (2007) John: Anne: I think there’s a thunderstorm What makes you think that? I just heard a loud noise that could have been thunder That could have been an airplane I think it was thunder, because I think it’s a thunderstorm Well, it has been really muggy around here today Alternative is low plausibility: “John and Anne are in their camper van at their woodland campsite” Alternative is high plausibility: “John and Anne are in their trailer home near the airport”
People rate John’s circular argument as more convincing when the alternative explanation is less plausible Alternative is low plausibility: “John and Anne are in their camper van at their woodland campsite” Alternative is high plausibility: “John and Anne are in their trailer home near the airport”
Mini-summary • “Rational” explanations of fallacies? • Examples: • Argument from ignorance (epistemic closure) • Circular arguments (appeal to explanatory system)
It is by no means easy to decide just what is meant by reason - William James (1890)
It is by no means easy to decide just what is meant by reason - William James (1890) When is “argument from ignorance” a fallacy and when it it wise? When is an “inductive inference” warranted and when is it silly? → Are people really doing the selection task “wrong”? R G 2 7
Let it snow!
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